| adsl487504@telfort.nl on Sat, 4 Apr 2015 19:16:25 +0200 (CEST) |
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| Re: <nettime> nottime: the end of nettime - let's change the |
Nettime took off in a studio next to mine at Kuenstlerhaus Bethanien,
in 1995. I did not get then very well what Geert and Pit were up to, as
my Eastern European mind was warped around different issues. But it was
precisely the Eastern-European, non-US-centric side of nettime that
made it fly well, in spectacular loops, from Berlin to Budapest to
Ljubljana, from net-art to the post-Soros era, to â¦
The Bucharest meeting, which has been presented here in the initial
posting as a symptom of nettimeâs end, was my idea. Last year in July,
afetr taking over the directorship of the National Museum of
Contemporary Art (MNAC) Bucharest, one of my first thoughts has been to
the flesh meetings of nettime, and to what they meant to me, and to
others.
I briefly shared with Ted first and then with Felix my feelings, and my
interest in bringing about a nettime gathering at MNAC, in Bucharest
(sorry David, no more Amsterdam for once). At the same time I shared my
reservations about the current lack of interest for this region (yes,
Hugary, Ukraine, Russia, the Baltics, Poland, the Black Sea and the
Danube question, Romania even), and the dominant non-iconic
preoccupations of the list, which make it slightly off-beat for a
vivid, rapidly growing community of young people here, who are mainly
interested in visual culture, activist art, cross-media experiments,
and the complicated politics of the region.
They come and tell me that the buzz goes about Bucharest being the
Berlin of the 2015s. Might be. MNAC is located in what has been called
for many years Ceausescuâs Palace; now we have here as neighbors the
Romanian Parliament. It is an interesting setting. Leviathan. We do not
have fancy budgets, but a great terrace with a view on the construction
site of the what will be the National Cathedral of Romania (!). And we
have the skills to animate good gatherings and good parties.
The rest is on you, nettimers. If this sounds like an invitation, then
come with the details.
Sincerely yours,
Calin Dan
On 04 Apr 2015, at 06:15, Colin Hodson <colinhodson@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi everyone.
I too wondered what nettime meant to me at the spectre of its possible
demise. I don't think of myself as active in the contributing sense,
but definitely active in consuming the fantastic output ( and I mean
fantastic in terms of volume, speed, and ideas bouncing through the
posts). The loss for me would be that I am being exposed to thought
and histories I would not come across in other contexts. And yes, not
a peep about so many things. But a lot of peeps that have taken me to
quite some places.
So nettime fuels me in a unique way, big thanks to those who share
here. Very interesting and a pleasure to see it (and some of its
constituents) in this April 1st relexivity.
cheers
Colin
On 01/04/2015, nettime mod squad <nettime@kein.org> wrote:
Dear Nettimers, present and past --
<...>
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org